Posted on Dec 1, 2017
PO3 C School Student
2.62K
7
6
3
3
0
I'm aware that while serving there will be things that simply cannot be mentioned, or places/activities that are less than easy to verify or may be OpSec issues to really discuss. I'm looking for tips to keep my resume up-to-date as I progress in my career with out saying too much or potentially violating OpSec measurements. This was not something college prepared me for!
Posted in these groups: 79c97f6 OPSECK14817871 Resume
Avatar feed
Responses: 3
1SG Vet Technician
2
2
0
You need to think in terms of how a future civilian employer will think. Outside some obscure government job that you might apply for that has specific need to know about your missions, most don't really care. They don't care that you were responsible for maintaining the electronic tracking of ninjas during operation "Aquaman's Spear" at xxx deg lat, yyy deg long.

They want to know that you have experience maintaining data links, or communications equipment, or general troubleshooting of electronic systems. I suggest you go to the internet and look up the general open source description of your job (rating?) and use that to guide your resume. Also talk about more general skills and accomplishments that you may have.

I don't know the specifics with the Navy, but the Army has transition resources that can help and often provide specialists in taking your military career and pulling out stuff that is useful in a civilian resume.
(2)
Comment
(0)
1SG Russell S.
1SG Russell S.
>1 y
Agree. Vets put military stuff in resumes because they like to read it, employers do not care.
They care about your ability to fit in, be trained, add value to them and do the proposed job.
Get a civilian that has never been in the military to read yours and if they have any question about something you need to fix it so it is clearly understood.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SPC David Willis
1
1
0
Unless you spent a career in JSOC most of what we have done is unclassified, at least from an infantry point of view. Best rule of thumb is to keep things simple. Instead of "deployed on presence patrol/checkpoint security mission in Nasiriyah, IRAQ" Just say "deployed to Iraq" In fact employers appreciate simplicity when it comes to military applications as a majority have no clue what we would be talking about if we laid our entire ERB out on paper. Speak to what leadership positions you held and how much responsibility you had, and not so much what you did.
(1)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
CPT Assistant Operations Officer (S3)
0
0
0
I am a bit curious about this. As an E3 how much could you have been exposed too that is classified and what of this classified material would you put into a resume. Have you signed a Non-Disclosure Statement? If you did then you are limited as to what you could say. I have worked in the intel world a bit. Even with that in my background I would now talk abou it. It was years ago and it really wasn't anything special. Where I was in Iraq 14 years ago isn't going to compromise anything. What I have seen is some people overact when it comes to this. Plus, you would really have to question if telling anything from operations to a future employer would mean anything. Would a civilian really know what any of these means. If in doubt I would seek out a military resume writing assistant.
(0)
Comment
(0)
PO3 C School Student
PO3 (Join to see)
>1 y
I've been exposed to nothing of significance yet. I'm just getting started on my career, but I'm always keeping my resume updated and want to ensure I keep it straight along the way. This is also a discussion I've had with more experienced sailors and it seems sometimes there's a grey area or disconnect between military and civilian resumes. An example would be that mine is still formatted as I learned in college but my husband's is entirely different as he's been serving for over fifteen years and he struggled with his. I'm just looking for advice preemptively.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SPC David Willis
SPC David Willis
>1 y
Also keep in mind that most of what you will encounter that is classified is tech/equipment capabilities which, classified issues aside, wouldn't have much of a place on your resume to begin with. And don't worry if there is something you come in contact with that you should never, ever disclose in your life time, you will be told by 10 different people.
(1)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close